Skip to main content

Delays for Czech highways

THE NEW highway network currently being built in the Czech Republic will be completed in 2025, five years later than the original planned completion date of 2020. The country’s Transport Ministry has said that €19.55 billion will be needed to extend the total length of the network from the current 1,113km to 2,153km. However,it has pointed out that a new system of funding will be required or there will be a shortfall to pay for the plans by 2020.Various options are being considered at present with bond issu
May 30, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
THE NEW highway network currently being built in the Czech Republic will be completed in 2025, five years later than the original planned completion date of 2020. The country’s Transport Ministry has said that €19.55 billion will be needed to extend the total length of the network from the current 1,113km to 2,153km. However,it has pointed out that a new system of funding will be required or there will be a shortfall to pay for the plans by 2020.

Various options are being considered at present with bond issues and PPPs in the frame. The Transport Ministry has said that high priority link roads suitable for the PPP projects include the R35 linking Hradec Kralove with Olomouc;the Prague ring road; the D3 linking Prague with Ceske Budejovice, the I/11 from Nosovice to the border with Slovakia, and the reconstruction of the D1 highway. Meanwhile, an environmental report on the Prerov-Breclav dual carriageway suggests that building two tunnels (6.8km long and 1.6km long) underneath a bird habitat will be less environmentally damaging than other options.

The Transport and Environmental Ministries are in favour of the tunnels although there are questions over estimated €510 million cost of this option. Another option that avoids the bird habitat entirely would be 7km longer and be slightly more expensive.

Related Content

  • Czech road project, bidding delay
    May 22, 2023
    Bidding has been delayed for a major Czech road project.
  • Mullum Mullum Valley untouched by progress
    July 20, 2012
    Preserving the unspoiled Mullum Mullum Valley was the major consideration when deciding to build a traffic tunnel The answer to one of the major issues facing construction of the A$2.5 billion EastLink route in Australia was simple: construct a tunnel. While it was expensive, those involved realised they had little option but to go underground to protect the environmentally sensitive Mullum Mullum Valley, an untouched area of wood and bushland in Melbourne. EastLink, the 39km toll road project on the easter
  • Višňové Tunnel delays continue
    June 21, 2022
    What will be Slovakia’s longest tunnel at 7.5km is facing more technical issues, according to the contractor Skanska.
  • India plans major infrastucture investment
    February 10, 2012
    India says it turned its Commonwealth Games into a world-class success, and now it aims to do the same with its infrastructure. Patrick Smith reports. On October, 2010 India put itself on the world stage, and disaster appeared to loom as a catalogue of problems dogged its biggest ever sporting event. Costing nearly US$2 billion to stage, the most expensive Commonwealth Games ever were, according to some, in doubt.